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Less Body Hair Emerges in Homo erectus

~ < 1 of audio

Author note. 

Explore voice = Exploratory style. Very punchy. Personal, and lively using “me,” “you,” “us,” and “I” freely.

I want you to feel me right there with you. We use “I” and “me” and “us” without apology. If the Explain voice is a bridge, the Explore voice is the hike we take across it. It is lively, reflective, and sometimes a bit raw. It is the sound of a shared exploration where I lead you by the hand, but we both discover the view at the same time.

This is where I get to think out loud. Not with definitions, we aren’t just looking at the facts; we are looking at how they feel and what they mean for our lives. I’m talking to you about what I’ve found and what I’m still figuring out. It is engaging because it is real, and it is reflective because it is honest.

The goal is real advice and enjoyable reading. I want to land on something you can actually use. It’s about being direct, being punchy, and making sure that by the time we reach the end of the page, we’ve both found something worth keeping.

And now the piece.

Less Body Hair Emerges in Homo erectus

1.2 Million BCE
Supported by DNA evidence.

As Homo erectus roamed the expansive African savannas, a significant evolutionary shift unfolded in our lineage: a visibly reduced coat of body hair. This change likely enhanced sweat-based cooling, allowing early humans to shed heat efficiently under the intense sun during long bouts of walking, running, hunting, and foraging. In open landscapes where endurance mattered more than bursts of speed, staying cool became a survival advantage.

Importantly, this shift did not involve losing hair follicles or inventing a new body pattern. The basic map of hair follicles across the human body is ancient, shared with other great apes, and likely predates the human–chimpanzee split over seven million years ago. What changed in Homo erectus was how those follicles behaved—producing finer, shorter, and less pigmented hair across most of the body. Humans did not become hairless; they became better at heat management.

While this transition marked a clear trend toward the hairiness levels seen in modern humans, variation almost certainly persisted. Some individuals may have retained slightly thicker or more visible body hair, offering modest insulation in cooler regions or during seasonal shifts. As with many human traits, natural diversity remained the rule, not the exception.

Skin Color Variety: Each time members of the genus Homo spread into new environments, the melanin-regulation systems shared by all primates responded accordingly. The following image imagines our ancestors across the diverse climates they had reached by about 1.2 million years ago.

Primary Timeline…
References

The Evolution of Human Hair and Its Role in Thermoregulation – https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/the-evolution-of-human-hair-and-its-role-in-thermoregulation

The Surprising Origins and Uses of Human Hair – https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/the-surprising-origins-and-uses-of-human-hair-29138876/

Hair | Anatomy – Encyclopedia Britannica: https://www.britannica.com/science/hair-anatomy

The Role of Hair in Human Evolution – ScienceDirect: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0047248413000282


That History Story, 

was first published on TST 2 years ago.

The flashcard inspired by it is this.

Front: Do humans have the same general hair pattern and follicles as chimpanzees?
Back: Yes
All this is part of the broader TST project.
Think of tidbits as intellectual scaffolding: modest on their own, essential to the strength of the whole.
Rather than chasing completeness, each piece aims for clarity at the time it is written.

The end!

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